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Sample Track 1:
"Luna y Sol" from Amatoria
Sample Track 2:
"Suena mi Guitarra" from Amatoria
Sample Track 3:
"Otra Vez" from Amatoria
Sample Track 4:
"Te quiero a ti" from Amatoria
Sample Track 5:
"Este amor" from Amatoria
Sample Track 6:
"Hermosa" from Amatoria
Sample Track 7:
"Del Ayer" from Amatoria
Sample Track 8:
"Siempre Nuevo" from Amatoria
Sample Track 9:
"Riendo Asi" from Amatoria
Sample Track 10:
"El Sabor" from Amatoria
Sample Track 11:
"Tan Cerca" from Amatoria
Sample Track 12:
"Amatoria" from Amatoria
Buy Recording:
Amatoria
Layer 2
Federico Aubele - Amatoria (2009)

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Wonderful Vision, Federico Aubele - Amatoria (2009) >>

Buenos Aires-born songwriter/guitarist Federico Aubele’s going for a rico suave thing here, sort of like a downtempo Gipsy Kings. At a distance this may sound like generic latin lounge music – it’s kind of formulaic, but it’s a formula that works. This cd offers layers of acoustic and electric guitars with hushed lounge lizard vocals (in Spanish) over a trip-hop beat. Aubele could use a lyricist, and there are places where the drum machine becomes completely claustrophobia-inducing (the album is just out on the well-intentioned but sonically numbing Thievery Corporation’s label). Now for some good things about the cd. Aubele is an excellent, terse guitarist: there aren’t any wasted notes here. And the songs are pretty, most of them in moody minor keys. Plus, he’s dubwise. His reggae touches typically linger and reverberate in the background, lithe guitar accents cleverly and judiciously kicking in at unexpected moments.
Suena Mi Guitarra sways and bounces, trip-hop meets tango with a jangly reggae guitar feel. Te Quiero a Ti is upbeat and evocative of Mexican groups like the Reggae Cowboys. Del Ayer layers phased backward-masked guitars in the background; there’s also a duet with the unlikely choice of Miho Hatori from Cibo Matto, who quite surprisingly acquits herself so well that she really ought to have been given a turn out front. The most bizarre cut here – tropicalia is just full of them, isn’t it? – is the samba-inflected El Sabor with its layers of artificial, bubbling synth, early 80s ELO goes to Brazil. The cd ends with an acoustic guitar instrumental that offers more than a hint of a more stark, purist sensibility lurking here. Piazzolla it’s not, but it’s something you can put on at a party and nobody will complain – in fact, you’ll probably have people asking you who this is – and it’s a good late-night sleepytime cd.
 05/29/09 >> go there
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